Revisiting the International Stock Price Synchronicity Issue

This paper examines the issue of disparity in international stock price synchronicity. Some major studies have shown that stock prices in countries that have poor track records of government protection of private property right tend to move more synchronously. Investors in these countries expend lit...

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Main Authors: LIM, Kian Guan, Foo, Sing Tien, Cheng, Hao
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2014
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/4296
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spelling sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-52952016-11-22T02:27:37Z Revisiting the International Stock Price Synchronicity Issue LIM, Kian Guan Foo, Sing Tien Cheng, Hao This paper examines the issue of disparity in international stock price synchronicity. Some major studies have shown that stock prices in countries that have poor track records of government protection of private property right tend to move more synchronously. Investors in these countries expend little effort to extract firm-specific information, thus causing price to be driven mainly by market-wide information. However, such information hypothesis has been challenged by new literature arguing that price synchronicity may be related to information efficiency in a more complicated way, or not at all. We attempt to ask the question if the negative relationship between price synchronicity and level of country proprietary right protection could be explained by factors other than the information hypothesis. Using empirical data that cover 40 countries over the period from 1995 to 2012, we show that after controlling for a number of structural variables and robust checking, both stock market volatility and stock market capitalizations have significant impacts on price synchronicity of stocks invariably in every country. The capitalization effect is subtle and is apparent only at a disaggregated level of the economies across countries. We provide an alternative and complementary reason why the R2 disparity occurs internationally by suggesting a non-information explanation that has to do more with corporate and industry structures of integrations. A capitalization index is constructed which is less coarse than the Herfindahl indexes, and which enables us to capture the effects of industry compositions and intra-industry firm correlations. This index is able to explain cross-sectional variations in price synchronicity as well as the property rights factor. 2014-10-01T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/4296 Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Price Synchronicity Market Capitalization Proprietary Rights Protection Industry Structures Firm-specific risk Market-wide risk Business
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Price Synchronicity
Market Capitalization
Proprietary Rights Protection
Industry Structures
Firm-specific risk
Market-wide risk
Business
spellingShingle Price Synchronicity
Market Capitalization
Proprietary Rights Protection
Industry Structures
Firm-specific risk
Market-wide risk
Business
LIM, Kian Guan
Foo, Sing Tien
Cheng, Hao
Revisiting the International Stock Price Synchronicity Issue
description This paper examines the issue of disparity in international stock price synchronicity. Some major studies have shown that stock prices in countries that have poor track records of government protection of private property right tend to move more synchronously. Investors in these countries expend little effort to extract firm-specific information, thus causing price to be driven mainly by market-wide information. However, such information hypothesis has been challenged by new literature arguing that price synchronicity may be related to information efficiency in a more complicated way, or not at all. We attempt to ask the question if the negative relationship between price synchronicity and level of country proprietary right protection could be explained by factors other than the information hypothesis. Using empirical data that cover 40 countries over the period from 1995 to 2012, we show that after controlling for a number of structural variables and robust checking, both stock market volatility and stock market capitalizations have significant impacts on price synchronicity of stocks invariably in every country. The capitalization effect is subtle and is apparent only at a disaggregated level of the economies across countries. We provide an alternative and complementary reason why the R2 disparity occurs internationally by suggesting a non-information explanation that has to do more with corporate and industry structures of integrations. A capitalization index is constructed which is less coarse than the Herfindahl indexes, and which enables us to capture the effects of industry compositions and intra-industry firm correlations. This index is able to explain cross-sectional variations in price synchronicity as well as the property rights factor.
format text
author LIM, Kian Guan
Foo, Sing Tien
Cheng, Hao
author_facet LIM, Kian Guan
Foo, Sing Tien
Cheng, Hao
author_sort LIM, Kian Guan
title Revisiting the International Stock Price Synchronicity Issue
title_short Revisiting the International Stock Price Synchronicity Issue
title_full Revisiting the International Stock Price Synchronicity Issue
title_fullStr Revisiting the International Stock Price Synchronicity Issue
title_full_unstemmed Revisiting the International Stock Price Synchronicity Issue
title_sort revisiting the international stock price synchronicity issue
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2014
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/4296
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